Publication | Open Access
The General Transcription Factor RAP30 Binds to RNA Polymerase II and Prevents It from Binding Nonspecifically to DNA
77
Citations
45
References
1992
Year
Human Rap30Rna Polymerase IiMolecular BiologyGene TranscriptionProtein SynthesisTranscriptional RegulationProtein ExpressionMolecular DiagnosticsTranscription FactorsRna ProcessingNatural Rap30/74Rna BiologyDna ReplicationGene ExpressionTranscription RegulationBiomolecular EngineeringProtein BiosynthesisRap30 BoundChromatinNatural SciencesNucleic Acid BiochemistryGene RegulationMicrobiologySystems BiologyMedicineGenome Editing
RAP30/74 is a human general transcription factor that binds to RNA polymerase II and is required for initiation of transcription in vitro regardless of whether the promoter has a recognizable TATA box (Z. F. Burton, M. Killeen, M. Sopta, L. G. Ortolan, and J. F. Greenblatt, Mol. Cell. Biol. 8:1602-1613, 1988). Part of the amino acid sequence of RAP30, the small subunit of RAP30/74, has limited homology with part of Escherichia coli sigma 70 (M. Sopta, Z. F. Burton, and J. Greenblatt, Nature (London) 341:410-414, 1989). To determine which sigmalike activities of RAP30/74 could be attributed to RAP30, we purified human RAP30 and a RAP30-glutathione-S-transferase fusion protein that had been produced in E. coli. Bacterially produced RAP30 bound to RNA polymerase II in the absence of RAP74. Both partially purified natural RAP30/74 and recombinant RAP30 prevented RNA polymerase II from binding nonspecifically to DNA. In addition, nonspecific transcription by RNA polymerase II was greatly inhibited by RAP30-glutathione-S-transferase. DNA-bound RNA polymerase II could be removed from DNA by partially purified RAP30/74 but not by bacterially expressed RAP30. Thus, the ability of RAP30/74 to recruit RNA polymerase II to a promoter-bound preinitiation complex may be an indirect consequence of its ability to suppress nonspecific binding of RNA polymerase II to DNA.
| Year | Citations | |
|---|---|---|
Page 1
Page 1